St. Paul’s Gate and Museum of the Ostian Way

St. Paul’s Gate (Porta San Paolo, in Italian) is part of the complex of the Aurelian Walls, built by order of the Emperor Aurelian in 275 CE, and presents itself as one of the best preserved city-gates in the whole circuit of walls. The current name came into use during the Middle Ages because of its proximity to the Basilica of St.Paul outside the Walls, which could be reached by means of the Ostian way, beginning its course, leading to Ostia (hence its name) precisely from this gate.

In its original phase it consisted of two twin arches with two semicircular towers. Restoration and refurbishment works were carried out under the rule of the emperors Maxentius (306-312 CE) and Honorius (401-403 CE) so as to change its aspect, that currently shows an entrance arch placed before the original two-arched gateway. The Gate underwent several modifications also in the next centuries. During the Greek-Gothic war, in 594 CE, the Goths of Totila entered Rome through it. The Gate now appears isolated, but it was originally connected to that stretch of the Aurelian Walls descending from the hill of San Saba as far as the Pyramid of Caius Cestius. It was isolated from the walls as early as in 1920 to facilitate the traffic flow in the square, whilst the stretch of the wall that connected it to the Pyramid was destroyed during the bombing in 1943.

Today the Gate is home to the Museum of the Ostian Way (Museo della Via Ostiense), created in 1954 in order to illustrate the topography of the area between Roma and Ostia, which, in the Roman age, was hinged on this important arterial road. Within it are held materials issuing from that area; among them, worth particular notice, are three painted arcosolia from a tomb of the 3rd century CE near the Basilica of St. Paul and numerous plaster casts from inscriptions as well as funerary stones. On the first level of the two towers are exhibited two important models, made by Italo Gismondi, representing the ancient town of Ostia and the ensemble of the imperial ports of Claudius and Trajan. In the eastern tower there are remains of frescoes, dateable from a period comprised between the late 13th century and the early 14th century, which decorated a chapel wherein a Byzantine community used to convene.

Opening times, tickets, services

Opening times:

Tuesday - Sunday from 9:00 to 13:30;

Closed on Monday.

Closed on Sunday from 27 July to 31 August 2014.

On the aforementioned Sundays, an accompanied tour of the Museum, encompassing a visit to the nearby Pyramid of Caius Cestius, is available (by advance booking) at 10:30.